There’s grave danger in conflating legitimate political criticism of Israel with outright antisemitism, according to one man whose family has seen more than its share of the latter. And he sees serious risk in policing anti-Zionism more than antisemitism.
The man issuing this warning is Mikey Weinstein, a Jewish man who probably experiences more antisemitism than any non-famous American. Because he’s quite famous among antisemites.
For the last two decades, Weinstein has fought for the separation of church and state. A veteran of the Air Force and the Reagan White House, Weinstein founded the Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF) to protect men and women in uniform from unconstitutional proselytization.
He spends the vast majority of his time helping Christians. The vast majority of the hate he gets is also from Christians.
The MRFF claims 87,000 clients, 95% of them Christian. Just not Christian the way some superiors want them to be.
So Weinstein and the MRFF swat down unconstitutional prayer sessions, Bible displays, and other — almost always Christian — violations of the Constitution’s prohibition against government respect for any establishment of religion. These fights make news. Especially Fox News.
If success can be measured by the intensity of the opposition, it’s worth noting that congressional Republicans just tried to ban members of the military from communicating with the MRFF. That effort backfired, but most of the weapons wielded against Weinstein aren’t legislative amendments.
That’s where the antisemitism comes in. At least, the overt antisemitism.
The fact that it’s a Jewish guy thwarting Christian proselytization in the military is too much for some Christians. Thousands of them.
So they target the MRFF and Weinstein and his family with hate mail. And hate speech online. And threats. Violent images too extreme even for the publisher of his wife’s books about the threats they get.
Some MRFF critics have come to the Weinstein home. They come in darkness, but leave their mark. A swastika. Shit. Slashed tires. Dead animals. Shots fired through the window.
The rhetorical assaults lack the coy ambiguities of mainstream antisemitism. No globalist dog whistles here; they’re almost refreshingly old-fashioned. “Christ-killer,” they say.
A spokesman for MRFF says he’s worked closely with Weinstein since 2007. He’s seen the messages.
“I personally know Mikey wakes up every day knowing that thousands of Christian Nationalists nationwide would like to see him dead,” he says.
John Allen is the sheriff where Weinstein lives, and confirmed the threats to me. “I know the ongoing threats against the Weinsteins and they are all antisemitic,” Allen says. “Due to what is going on overseas I believe the whole nation has seen an uptick in hate speech and the same applies here.”
Nationally, law enforcement have reported surges in antisemitic hate crimes, but Weinstein cautions that criticism of Israel’s response to the Oct. 7 Hamas massacre is worlds apart from what he experiences. The former, he says, is political speech — with which he happens to agree.
What Weinstein gets, he says, is genuine antisemitism.
“We get about a dozen to 18 pretty grotesque antisemitic threats on a daily basis,” he says.
I asked him whether the antisemitism he’s seen since Oct. 7 is a response to Israel’s devastation of Gaza or more a continuation of pre-existing Christian nationalism. “[A]lmost exclusively the latter;” he said in an email, “from fundamentalist Christian nationalists emboldened, specifically, by the POS tRump and, generally, by MAGA.”
And Weinstein says it’s not getting enough attention from the politicians policing expressions of support for Palestinian rights.
Even “from the river to the sea,” which has been a slogan for Jewish eradication, can also be and historically has been used as a peaceful call for Palestinian autonomy, Weinsten notes. But that kind of ambiguity is rare in the overt antisemitism on which he’s now a reluctant authority.
The examples can be hard to read. There are posts with subject headings like “Fuuck you dirty kikes.” Commenters with handles like “Kike girl rayper, aka Anti-termite-ism is GOOD” give fake email addresses — FucktheJews@gmail.com — and URLs like www.thejewsmustdie.com.
Two days after Christmas, “Jesus is king of kings'' posted a comment with the subject "Scum Jews...Should Have Been Gassed." The comment itself read: “Jews are still evil Christ killing scum blood drinking kids of jewsatan in 2024. john 8.44.”
That Bible verse refers to Jesus telling a group of Jews, “You belong to your father, the devil, and you want to carry out your father’s desires.” It’s a verse Christians share with the Weinsteins a lot more frequently than the Sermon on the Mount.
Some are aware, or correctly assume, that Weinstein lost family in the Holocaust. “All your family and all your kin were wiped out in the furnaces and the ovens by the Nazis and Hitler,” one caller said in a voicemail:
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